South Wales Echo

Hot Golfs, great drives

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WITH Golf sales figures that are the envy of many Volkswagen could be excused for settling back and resting on its laurels.

But that’s not how the German marque behaves and that means the Golf Mk VII has been given a mid-life make-over.

Admittedly, there is nothing too radical as VW likes the Golf to evolve slowly, but the car has received a number of enhancemen­ts that improve its appearance, some extra on-board technology has been added and a new petrol engine has been introduced.

Design tweaks see restyled bumpers, along with standard or optional LED headlights in place of the xenon ones, animated rear indicators, new wheel trims, LED rear light clusters and additional colour options.

The upgrades within the car are more noticeable and include a new infotainme­nt system complete with new instrument­ation such as the smart 9.2-inch touchscree­n with gesture control. The screen can be configured to show different informatio­n and the output is much clearer.

But possibly the most significan­t changes, especially for anyone who favours high performanc­e models, is beneath the bonnet with a power increase in the hot hatch GTI and R models.

There’s no denying the desire for these sorts of Golf models and any doubters just need Google VW Golf Clubsport S. This vehicle powered by a 2.0 TFSI 310ps engine holds the Nurburgrin­g Ring record for the fastest front-wheel-drive car.

Just 400 models were made worldwide and the UK market snapped up 150 of them priced at £33,995. They were all sold before the official asking price had been announced.

The reason this is important is because the latest Golf R has a power output that has been increased from 300ps to 310ps just like the Clubsport S and that makes it the joint most powerful Golf made to date and the most potent currently on offer.

We had the opportunit­y to try out VW’s latest high performanc­e models and they certainly lived up to all the hype.

First up was the Golf R 2.0-litre TSI 310ps 4MOTION model with sixspeed manual gearbox in five-door guise. It was priced at £32,520 (£37,720 with options) and could reach from 0-62mph in 5.1 seconds with a top speed of 155mph.

Combined fuel economy is a claimed 37.7mpg with carbon emissions of 180g/km.

The R styling pack means the car is equipped with uniquely shaped front and rear bumpers, rear roof spoiler, side sills, plus special ‘R’ badging along with a special grille with matt chrome strip.

The sports suspension is also lowered. There are twin trapezoida­l tailpipes and the black brake callipers complete the look.

Inside the car is a three spoke sports steering wheel with ‘R’ logo, carbon-touch and piano black decorative inserts, sport seats with badging and stainless steel sports pedals.

The seats are snug and supportive and the Golf R starts up with quite a roar – which is a hint at what’s in store.

On 30mph roads the car ambles along in a most composed manner, but almost seems relieved when it’s true potential can be unleashed on faster country lanes where the roadholdin­g is super grippy.

You will feel the odd bump or two and the car’s dynamic handling certainly encourages you to drive ‘enthusiast­ically’ into tight bends.

The power at your disposal seems almost endless and the accelerati­on is blistering­ly quick through the six speed manual gearbox.

There is a little noise from the engine and the road surface when driven hard, but the cabin is well insulated when driving in a more sedate manner.

It’s the sort of car that you get out of and think ‘now that was worthwhile.’

We also had a chance to get behind the wheel the Golf GTI 2.0-litre TSI now with 230ps and a six-speed manual gearbox and in five door styling.

This car was priced at £28,520 – optional extras increased the cost to £32,940. It could sprint from 0-62mph in 6.4 seconds, maxed out at 155mph, had combined fuel economy of 44.8mpg with CO2 emissions of 148g/ km.

Once again GTI-specific styling introduced unique bumpers, a rear roof spoiler and a black honeycomb front intake with GTI badging, plus red brake callipers.

The inside featured smart red contrast stitching on the seats and gear lever along with a sporty three-spoke, flat-bottomed steering wheel.

The GTI seemed a little calmer than the Golf R.

It certainly delivers all the awesome driving dynamics that you could possibly wish for, but it seems more composed in its general behaviour.

It can corner with confidence and the steering is very precise with plenty of driver feedback and then when circumstan­ces change it can perform in a very ‘normal’ manner if necessary.

So what is it that attracts people to the higher performing models such as the Golf GTI and Golf R?

That question is best answered by Scott Fisher, product affairs manager at VW, who said: “The particular appeal of the Golf GTI and R models is their breadth of capability.

“They are perfectly suitable to run around in, take on the weekly shopping trip, ferry the kids to school in and commute to and from work. But they are equally at home on the race track blasting around and being driven in a progressiv­e fashion – shall we say!”

And if the GTI or R power outputs are not quite fiery enough, then VW will be reintroduc­ing its Performanc­e model in May or June this years with a whopping 245ps at its disposal.

Of course, there are more sensible Golf options out there with the entry level S version priced from £17,625.

With 113 models in the Golf range there is a car to suit all tastes and requiremen­ts and there is even more good news as Golf prices across the range have been reduced on average by almost £650.

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